Syrian President Bashar al-Assad said he had yet to see anything concrete from U.S. President Donald Trump over his vow to defeat Islamic State (IS) and called U.S. forces in Syria “invaders” because they were there without government permission.
Assad, in an interview with Chinese TV station Phoenix, said in theory he still saw scope for cooperation with Trump though practically nothing had happened in this regard.
Assad said Trump’s campaign pledge to prioritise the defeat of IS had been a promising approach.
“We haven’t seen anything concrete yet regarding this rhetoric,” he noted. Assad dismissed the U.S.-backed military campaign against IS in Syria as “only a few raids” he said had been conducted locally. “We have hopes that this administration … is going to implement what we have heard,” he added.
Asked about a deployment of U.S. forces near the northern city of Manbij, Assad said: “Any foreign troops coming to Syria without our invitation … are invaders.”
“We don’t think this is going to help,” he added.
The U.S.-led coalition has been attacking IS in Syria for more than two years. It is currently backing a campaign by Syrian militia allies to encircle and ultimately capture Raqqa, IS’s base of operations in Syria.
Assad noted that the Russian-backed Syrian army was now very close to Raqqa city after advancing to the western banks of the Euphrates River.
He said Raqqa was “a priority for us”, but indicated that there could also be a parallel attack by the army towards Deir al-Zor in the east, near the Iraqi border. Deir al-Zor province is almost completely in the control of IS, also known as IS.
The Deir al-Zor region had been used by ISIS as a route for logistics support between IS in Iraq and ISIS in Syria, so whether you attack the stronghold or you attack the route that IS uses, it has the same result, Assad concluded.
Source: Reuters